BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives
  • By Time
  • By Place
  • By Story
⌘K
BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives

Discover the structures, places, and stories that shaped Edmonton's built environment.

Resources

NewsFAQsLinks

Contact

City of Edmonton Archivesarchives@edmonton.ca780-496-8711

We acknowledge that the land on which Edmonton is built is Treaty Six Territory. We thank the diverse Indigenous Peoples whose footsteps have marked this territory for centuries, such as nêhiyaw (Cree), Dené, Anishinaabe (Saulteaux), Nakota Isga (Nakota Sioux), and Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) peoples. We also acknowledge this as the Métis homeland and the home of one of the largest communities of Inuit south of the 60th parallel. It is a welcoming place for all peoples who come from around the world to share Edmonton as a home. It is important that we not only recognize our shared histories, but also each other's contributions to establishing the built heritage of Edmonton and Area.

© 2026 City of Edmonton Archives
Privacy Policy•Terms of Use•Accessibility
  1. People

Robert Falconer Duke

According to his daughter, Marianne Newby, Robert Falconer Duke was "very British" and a traditionalist at heart even though this ethos is not indicated by his modernist style of public work and upbringing in Saskatchewan.

On this page

About

Robert Falconer Duke's family emigrated to Canada when he was an infant in 1905. Born in Birkenhead, England in 1904, Duke was brought up and educated in Saskatoon, graduating from architectural training at the University of Saskatchewan in 1933. He worked as the District Resident Architect for the Dominion Department of Public Works in Saskatchewan from 1938 to 1946 at which time he moved to Edmonton for a position as assistant to the City Architect, Maxwell Dewar. When Dewar resigned in 1949, Duke took on the acting role of City Architect at first, then the full-fledged position in 1950. He resigned from this position in 1969.

His traditional style can be seen in the design of his half-timbered English Tudor Revival home, perched atop the river valley and Mill Creek Ravine. Similarly, his original bucolic design of Windsor Park flowed in a style reminiscent of an English country garden at a time when landscaped public green space was losing popularity to recreation grounds. However, Duke entered public service at a a time when the City needed to modernize and create new designs to keep up with rapid population growth. Generally with his assistant, William Tefler, Duke designed civic buildings; public utilities, like the Rossdale Water Filtration Plant; recreation structures, like the Borden Park Swimming Pool and Bandshell; and parks with playgrounds and baseball diamonds. In what architect David Murray and local historian Marianne Fedori call "an excellent and delightful example of Modern Expressionism," and "one of the most outstanding buildings of its time in Canada", Duke designed the Queen Elizabeth Planetarium as the city's tribute to the visit of the Royal Family in 1959. It is the nation's first civic planetarium and is perched at the base of the concentric design of Coronation Park; the design is a tribute to the Queen's scepter, with the planetarium a jewel in its base.

Connections

Structures

  • Glenora Substation- Station 650
Rick WilkinPrevious person

Person 60 of 72

Robert Percy BarnesNext person